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  2. List of tidal power stations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tidal_power_stations

    The Rance Tidal Power Station. This article lists most power stations that run on tidal power, both tidal range (impoundment via a barrage) and tidal stream (harnessing currents). Since tidal stream generators are an immature technology, no technology has yet emerged as the clear standard.

  3. European Marine Energy Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Marine_Energy_Centre

    The test site was officially opened by Alex Salmond, then Scotland's First Minister, in September 2007. [9] The following tidal developers have installed and tested technologies at EMEC's Fall of Warness tidal test site OpenHydro was the first developer to use the site. Dublin-based OpenHydro began the installation of their open-centred turbine ...

  4. Tidal power in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_power_in_the_United...

    The European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) was set up in 2003, and has pre-consented sites for testing wave power devices and tidal stream turbines. The grid-connected tidal side is in the Fall of Warness, to the west of Eday in Orkney. The first turbine tested was a 250 kW OpenHydro turbine, installed in December 2006. [3]

  5. Development of tidal stream generators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_tidal...

    The European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) was set up in Orkney in 2003, and developed a tidal test site in the Fall of Warness, to the west of the island of Eday. The site opened in 2006, and EMEC was granted a license in 2016 to test up to 10 MW of tidal stream devices, and has since hosted the testing of many of these devices. [1]

  6. Tidal power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_power

    The world's first marine energy test facility was established in 2003 to start the development of the wave and tidal energy industry in the UK. Based in Orkney, Scotland, the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) has supported the deployment of more wave and tidal energy devices than at any other single site in the world. EMEC provides a variety ...

  7. Paimpol–Bréhat tidal farm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paimpol–Bréhat_tidal_farm

    The test site is about 10 km offshore and covers a rectangular area approximately 140 m × 250 m. Water depths vary across the site at 26 m to 42 m below LAT, with a tidal range of about 11.5 m. Telemac 2D modelling gives a depth averaged velocity on a medium spring tide peaks at around 2.1–2.8 m/s. [6]

  8. Minesto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minesto

    [11] [12] This is a depression in the Irish Sea to the west of the West Anglesey Demonstration Zone, now the Morlais site. It is approximately 6.5 km offshore, and was consented by Natural Resources Wales in April 2017. [13] In 2017, Minesto submitted a scoping report for an 80 MW tidal kite array to be developed at the Holyhead Deep site.

  9. Magallanes Renovables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magallanes_Renovables

    The testing at EMEC was initially funded through the European OCEAN_2G project (Second Generation technologies in ocean Energy) coordinated by SAGRES SL, the parent company of Magallanes Renovables. [ 3 ] [ 15 ] Further funding through the Interreg OceanDEMO and the MaRINET2 projects allowed the testing to be extended beyond the initial two years.